Ganodermites

Ganodermites is an extinct monotypic genus of polypore fungus in the family Ganodermataceae. Its single member, Ganodermites libycus, is known from a structurally preserved (permineralized) fruit body from the Lower Miocene (near the start of the Neogene) (23.03โ€“15.7 Ma) of Jebel Zelten in North Africa. The fungus is thought to be closely related to the modern genus Ganoderma because of shared characteristics, including distinct growth increments in the fruit body, a stratified hymenium, equidistantly arranged pores, and double-layered spore walls. G. libycus has a trimitic hyphal system, with generative, skeletal, and binding hyphae.[1]

Ganodermites
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Ganodermites

A.Fleischm., M.Krings, H.Mayr & Agerer (2007)
Type species
Ganodermites libycus
A.Fleischm., M.Krings, H.Mayr & Agerer (2007)

The fruit body of G. libycus has tunnels containing fecal pellets, suggesting that the fungus was visited by fungivorous arthropods.[1]

References

  1. Fleischmann, Andreas; Krings, Michael; Mayr, Helmut; Agerer, Reinhard (2007). "Structurally preserved polypores from the Neogene of North Africa: Ganodermites libycus gen. et sp. nov. (Polyporales, Ganodermataceae)". Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology. 145 (1โ€“2): 159โ€“172. doi:10.1016/j.revpalbo.2006.10.001.
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